ferniesnow
I'm doo-ing it!
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2008
- Messages
- 112,490
- Reaction score
- 86,556
- Location
- beautiful, downtown Salmon Arm, BC
It was only a matter of time before the pressure would be put on the BC government to properly regulate and enforce the snowmobile industry.
I have said ever since I came to this marvelous province that the little yellow registration sticker and lack of enforcement regarding the registration was a joke. Why wasn't there a proper registration process with license plates (metal or plastic), insurance, and enforcement just like in most other provinces in Canada?
I also thought that is would be a good idea that with the high number of fatalities this winter and the rising number of fatallities that maybe there should be a mandatory snowmobiler's "operating course" as there is for boaters. The mandatory course should be nation wide and include avalanaches, ice, fences, night riding, preliminary safety, etc.
The registration process is easy. The insurance process is easy. The operating course is easy. All snowmobile operators in BC as well as the BC government should have these in place.
Protecting snowmobilers or diminishing the fatalities from avalanche dangers is the challenge. Do all snowmobilers in BC need an avalanache course? Is an avalanche course the ultimate answer? How do you handle the vast number of tourists?
There are a lot of BC residents riding snowmobiles that do not ride avalanche prone areas. One can argue that all of BC is avalanche country but there are many groomed trail areas that do not have avalanches and there is access to many forestry roads in the valley bottoms that do not have the dangers. The mom, pop, and kids situation (where most of us learned or taught our families) of riding to the cabin or to the lake and having a weiner roast, etc. is not a situation for a required avalanche course. Is an avalanche course mandatory for all snowmobilers? No! Is an avalanche course mandatory for snowmobilers riding the avalanche prone areas? Yes! Is an avalanche course enough to prevent fatalities? No! The debate goes on and on.....
Then where is the line and how do you enforce it? How do you enforce the thousands of tourists coming into the province? Not all the trails or accesses to the back country have trail pass vendors or "trail police" and it is not likely that that will or could happen. The logistics of that process is probably insurmountable or is it?
The process has started and we as snowmobilers can only hope that we are invited to have input.
I have said ever since I came to this marvelous province that the little yellow registration sticker and lack of enforcement regarding the registration was a joke. Why wasn't there a proper registration process with license plates (metal or plastic), insurance, and enforcement just like in most other provinces in Canada?
I also thought that is would be a good idea that with the high number of fatalities this winter and the rising number of fatallities that maybe there should be a mandatory snowmobiler's "operating course" as there is for boaters. The mandatory course should be nation wide and include avalanaches, ice, fences, night riding, preliminary safety, etc.
The registration process is easy. The insurance process is easy. The operating course is easy. All snowmobile operators in BC as well as the BC government should have these in place.
Protecting snowmobilers or diminishing the fatalities from avalanche dangers is the challenge. Do all snowmobilers in BC need an avalanache course? Is an avalanche course the ultimate answer? How do you handle the vast number of tourists?
There are a lot of BC residents riding snowmobiles that do not ride avalanche prone areas. One can argue that all of BC is avalanche country but there are many groomed trail areas that do not have avalanches and there is access to many forestry roads in the valley bottoms that do not have the dangers. The mom, pop, and kids situation (where most of us learned or taught our families) of riding to the cabin or to the lake and having a weiner roast, etc. is not a situation for a required avalanche course. Is an avalanche course mandatory for all snowmobilers? No! Is an avalanche course mandatory for snowmobilers riding the avalanche prone areas? Yes! Is an avalanche course enough to prevent fatalities? No! The debate goes on and on.....
Then where is the line and how do you enforce it? How do you enforce the thousands of tourists coming into the province? Not all the trails or accesses to the back country have trail pass vendors or "trail police" and it is not likely that that will or could happen. The logistics of that process is probably insurmountable or is it?
The process has started and we as snowmobilers can only hope that we are invited to have input.